Inez Branson
Inez Branson, last of the eight children of Thomas Henry Ousley Branson and Frances Bauer, was born 5 March 1890 on ranch land in the immediate vicinity of the mining outpost of Quartzburg, Mariposa County, CA. At the time of her birth, this community was often known by its alternate name, Washington Mine, a designation that would fade away by the time Inez was in her teens.
Inez spent her whole childhood in Mariposa County, but not all of it within the same home. Until age seven, she and her parents and older siblings continued to inhabit the house in which she had been born. Her father’s acreage was next to, or may even have been a section of, the 160-acre homestead of his parents John Sevier Branson and Martha Jane Ousley. In 1897, Inez’s uncle Joseph Branson, who possessed his own ranch nearby, bought out both his parents and his brother. The elderly couple continued to live on the land, but Thomas and Frances and family chose to move to a house about two miles south within the village of Hornitos. This residence was along Burns Creek in the part of Hornitos known locally as the Chinese section. It may have formerly been the home of Frances’s brother Michael Geary and family. Tom and Frances would make this their base until 1911, though it should be added that from 1902 to about 1908, Tom was often employed elsewhere in the county at Mt. Bullion mine, and both he and Frances lived in the barracks there. They kept title to the Burns Creek house, though. It is an open question how much time Inez may have spent at Mt. Bullion. Probably some, but several of her older siblings stayed put, and Inez probably remained in Hornitos with them on a regular basis rather than be subjected to the less comfortable environment of the mining outpost.
The end of the Nineteenth Century and early Twentieth was an era when folk of lightly-populated areas such as lower Mariposa County had to create their own social entertainment. A number of Tom and Frances’s kids rose to this challenge. Inez’s eldest two brothers, William and Hugh, were members of the Hornitos orchestra, playing bass born and violin, respectively. Inez was the organist for the Protestant club -- the meetings of which were held in private homes, the only church in Hornitos being the Catholic one, St. Catherine’s.
The Branson-Bauer nuclear family was strikingly tight-knit, with several children lingering in the household as adults. Inez shared the tendency to cleave to kinfolk. That was true even as she became the one female member of the group who most clearly demonstrated the ability to pack her bags and forge on as a solo being when necessary. By her mid-teens, she was already spending long intervals away from home. She had decided to become a teacher. There were no teaching-credential programs available near Hornitos. One of the nearest, if not the nearest, was in Stockton, San Joaquin County, CA, obliging her to find a suitable boarding situation there. Given her parents’ protectiveness, it was not an option to live with strangers. Happily, her older first cousin Mary Josephine Harrington McDonald and family had moved to Stockton, and so Inez lodged with them at their home at 16 N. Union Street. The photo at upper left was taken in the front yard of that house 19 May 1907. In the uncropped version, Inez is standing near the whole McDonald family and some visitors they were entertaining that day.
The school Inez chose was Western School of Commerce, a small private institution that prided itself on using the most modern methods and offering credentials in a variety of business skills such as bookkeeping, stenography and typing, indexing and filing, banking, and nursing. Many of these were skills seldom utilized in previous generations because until the dawn of the 20th Century, the vast majority of jobs consisted of menial labor on family-owned farms. The world was changing rapidly, and even such established service professions as nursing and teaching were utilizing unprecedented techniques and equipment with a much greater emphasis on training and certification. The school had only been founded in September, 1901. (It had operated under the name Gas City Business College for its first year.) Inez was among the earliest crops of students to graduate from Western School of Commerce with a certificate in education.
In taking up her career, Inez was pursuing a family tradition. Her first cousins Elizabeth “Lizzie” Bauer Reeb, Ethel Bauer, and Eunice Bauer (later to become Eunice Fipps), daughters of her uncle Michael Bauer, a Hornitos liveryman, and his wife Mary Jane Geary, were among those who taught in Sierra Nevada rural schools during the early 20th Century. So were her other first cousins, Marguerite Ellen Branson Thistle and Grace Mildred Branson Warner, daughters of her uncle Joe Branson and his wife Ellen Margaret Geary (sister of Mary Jane Geary).
Inez began teaching in small rural schools in the Mother Lode. (“Small” usually meaning one-room.) One of her earliest assignments was in Calaveras County. The family home in Hornitos remained her official address and was where she could be found when school was out of session. The 1910 census includes her as a member of the household, and the 15 June 1910 Mariposa Gazette includes an article welcoming “local girl” schoolteachers such as Inez home for the summer. This pattern of living elsewhere during the school year and then coming home to her parents continued into the mid-1910s. On at least one occasion, she did not have to leave at all. She was hired to be the teacher at Quartzburg School for the 1910-11 term. As a result, some of her older pupils were boys and girls who had been her younger classmates at the very same school only a few years prior. It was Inez who handed the diploma to Quartzburg School’s lone 1911 graduate, Shirley Bell Collins. (In just a couple of years more, Shirley would be Inez’s in-law. Shirley married Robert Jackson in 1912. In 1913, Robert’s sister Clara Jackson wed Eldridge Geary Branson, a first cousin of Inez who had been her almost-the-same-age classmate at Quartzburg School.)
In the middle-to-late 1910s, Inez is known to have taught in the town of Mariposa, as evidenced by two surviving photographs preserved by one of her students, Bernice Castagnetto (later to become Bernice Turner). One of those photos is reproduced in full below, courtesy of Bernice’s granddaughter-in-law Jacque Turner. Unfortunately a child scribbled on the original. The damage may well have been the work of Bernice herself, who was a first grader the year the photo was taken and may have simply been wanting to embellish the picture. Bernice is the little girl second from the right, seated. Inez is, of course, the adult woman standing between the benches. When making a note on the back of the photo in her old age, Bernice wrote down Inez’s name as Inez Bauer. This was an easy mistake to make, given Inez’s family connections, but it also may be a hint that her full name was Inez Bauer Branson.
In 1911, Inez’s parents moved to Manteca, San Joaquin County, CA, so that was the home Inez returned to for the next few summers. In the 18 May 1914 issue of the Oakland Tribune, Inez Branson “of Manteca” is described as the corresponding secretary of the central California chapter of the Federation of Parent-Teacher Clubs, a precursor of the national PTA. The article shows she was active in the pursuit of greater influence of women in education policy. The article’s main topic is the organizing taking place to pressure the county board of education in Stockton to add a woman to their number. She was not alone among the Branson women in this attitude. Her aunt Nancy Branson Harrington Napier was the vice president of the San Joaquin County chapter at that time, and was part of the campaign.
During the 1915-16 school term, Inez taught in Stanislaus County. When she became free for the summer, she had something different in mind than just returning home to Manteca. Her eldest brother, William, had been suffering from tuberculosis for a number of years, during which time his mother was one of his main caregivers -- William shared the house with his parents, and his condition was one reason why he had not embraced his parents’ departure to Manteca as the natural juncture to start living on his own. It was obvious to all, William included, that he would probably not live to see another summer. Inez decided the main purpose of her summer vacation would be to go camping in Yosemite Valley with her big brother for a couple of months. It wouldn’t slow down the disease, but at least the beauty of the surroundings, not to mention the cooler temperatures of the mountains, would provide a degree of solace and comfort. The scheme had the additional benefit of giving Frances a break. Frances had kidney disease and was not doing well. Inez’s decision was well-timed. Her loved ones were still strong enough to enjoy the benefit of her gesture for the entire stretch. They didn’t have much longer after that, though. Frances and William died in early November, literally on the same day and in the same house, about seven hours apart.
The death of her mother and brother occurred while Inez was in the midst of her year in Mariposa, teaching the students shown in the photo above. Looking back at the course of her entire life, it is plain to see the loss of these cherished family members marked the dawn of a new era in Inez’s existence. She was no longer satisfied living the sort of isolated and non-cosmopolitan lifestyle that she was subject to as a teacher stuck out in the boonies. As soon as her year was done, she redefined herself, immersing herself in a considerably more urban milieu than she had known -- the San Francisco Bay Area. Her first taste of that new life was in Vallejo, Solano County, CA, where she taught at Lincoln School for the 1917-18 school term and possibly for another year or two. Then in the early 1920s -- probably within the calendar year 1920 itself -- she moved in with her sister Alma and brother-in-law Herbert Kibby Youd. Alma and Herbert, who had spent the first bit of their married life in Merced, had relocated to Richmond, Contra Costa County, CA during the World War I years. Alma was a nurse. Herbert was an employee of the local Standard Oil refinery. Once becoming part of their household, Inez never left. For most of the 1920s and 1930s this home was also shared with her niece, Lila Frances Reeb, Alma’s daughter, born in 1905, though there were short stretches when Lila was not there -- in particular, a few years at the end of the 1920s when Lila was off teaching at a small rural school in Sierra County. In the early 1920s, their address was 452 Ninth. (Alma and Herbert had resided at 450 Ninth until Inez showed up. Apparently her arrival obliged them to obtain larger quarters next door.) From 1923 or so to about 1928, they lived at 920 Barrett. After that, 903 Barrett. All of those homes were within a stone’s throw of one another, and in turn were very close to Cottage Hospital, Alma’s workplace. The last, 903 Barrett, was practially within the walls of the facility.
Inez began teaching for the Richmond city school district, apparently coming on board as one of the many teachers brought in to teach at the large, brand-new school built at Port Richmond. By the mid-1920s she established herself for many years to come at Peres Elementary School. In addition to teaching, she was highly involved in lodge activities, especially the Order of the Eastern Star, the female Masonic organization.
The lives of the three and sometimes four housemates reflected the same sort of stability and relative quiet that the Thomas Branson/Frances Bauer household had enjoyed for so many decades in Quartzburg and Hornitos. Not only did all members seem inclined to this in terms of personality, but there was little practical need to uproot themselves given that they did not change employers, not even during the Great Depression when many people in the nation could not count on having jobs at all, much less ones they knew and were satisfied with. Another aspect that echoed the Mariposa County environment was that a large number of kinfolk lived nearby. Lila returned in 1930 and became a teacher and counsellor at Richmond Union High School. (She moved out upon her 1941 marriage to Fred Reinertson.) Other relatives from Hornitos had made Richmond their base of operations in the late 1910s or early 1920s. Inez and Alma may not have had their parents with them, but they did have their beloved uncle and aunt, Michael and Mary Jane Bauer (who resided just three blocks away on the same street at 1208 Barrett Avenue), along with Bauer/Geary first cousins and other familiar figures such as George Manuel Reeb, whose brother Frederick had been Alma’s first husband (and father of Lila), and whose wife was Lizzy Bauer, their first cousin.
One curious aspect of this entire group was the dearth of further children. Inez neither married nor had offspring. Lila was Alma’s only child, and Lila herself was childless, though she became a wife well before forty. Of the others, only George Reeb and Lizzy Bauer reproduced, and they had only one child, Marian Reeb, born in 1919, who in turn never became a mother. Perhaps the absence of any significant propagation of the clan kept the bond unusually tight between the extended family members who had chosen to settle in Richmond. They all remained until death or the brink of it.
Aside from the inevitable losses that came with growing older, the sisters seemed to have had to cope with only one less-than-ideal development. About 1943, they moved to 600 30th Street, about nine-tenths of a mile due east of their former home. This change of venue was probably welcome, but there would appear to have been one hiccup. Clues suggest Herbert may not have been invited along. The 1944 voter register shows him at 2729 Grant Avenue, putting him a block north and a block west of Alma and Inez -- a small separation, but not easy to explain unless there was some sort of marital rift. However, any discord must have been quickly resolved. All records after the mid-1940s to his death thirty years later identify Herbert as a resident of 600 30th.
Alma developed Lou Gehrig’s Disease in the 1950s and passed away from its effects in 1958. Inez stayed put, sharing 600 30th with Herbert. She did not last many more years after losing her beloved sister. She perished 13 November 1964. Her remains were interred in section 37 at Stockton Rural Cemetery, Stockton, San Joaquin County, CA. By the time she died, section 37, which contained the graves of her parents and all three of her brothers, had long been sold out. To accommodate her desire to be buried with her kinfolk, she was buried with Alex. (This was in keeping with the burial of her brother Hugh in 1949, whose remains had been added to their mother’s grave.) Inez's name and years of birth and death were inscribed on the front side of the gravemarker -- Alex’s own name and stats occupying the top side.
(Inez is not to be confused with her extended sister-in-law Inez Lilley. Inez Lilley, born Inez Youd, was the sister of Herbert Kibby Youd. Her father-in-law, Walter Lilley, had been a doctor Alma Branson worked with in the early 1910s at Merced Sanitarium.)
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